Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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ɔːlp jeri | middle lozva mansi (LM) | Sotjinova, Tatjana Alexejevna | poetry/song (poe) | War Songs - Heroic Songs (her) | 1397 | by Eichinger, Viktoria | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Munkácsi, Bernát (1896): Vogul népköltési gyüjtemény. In: IV. kötet. Életképek. Elsö füzet. Vogul szövegek és fordításaik. Budapest: Magyar tudományos akadémia, 156-167. | Munkácsi, Bernát; Kálmán, Béla | Munkácsi, Bernát (MU) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"Song of the hero" | – | – | – |
Citation |
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Munkácsi, Bernát 1896: OUDB Middle Lozva Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1397. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1397 (Accessed on 2024-11-10) |
ɔːlp jeri (glossed version) |
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1 |
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Song of the Hero. |
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The hero was born. |
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On the third day after his birth |
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[from the reindeer-leg hide of two and a half animals] |
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he was sewn boots from the reindeer-leg hide of two and a half animals, |
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[two and a half cubits] |
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he was made footwrappings from two and a half cubits of sackcloth. |
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He was sewn a shirt from thirty cubits of cloth, |
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after that, hardly a week old, |
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[thousand people held by his father] |
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he tallies all the thousand people held by his father, |
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[thousand people held by his father] |
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he counts all the thousand people held by his father. |
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He asks his mother, |
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[my father once demonstrated his man skill] |
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where is the small coat of arms with a chinpiece and impenetrable by bristles with which my father once demonstrated his man skill? |
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It's in the middle of three larches, |
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in the lowest leaf canopy of the larch. |
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It is brought to him. |
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[my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill] |
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Where is the dull steel sword with which my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill? |
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It is brought to him. |
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[my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill] |
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Where is the black iron quiver with which my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill? |
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It is brought to him. |
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Oh, mother! |
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[my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill] |
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Where is the nose-cut magic foal with which my father, the man, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill? |
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He is given an iron horse bit. |
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Later you will come to your old aunt, |
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she will ask you later: |
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you were born hardly a week ago, |
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where are you off to? |
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(With) the smell of moist food, (with) the smell of dry food |
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they gave him food, they gave him drink. |
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[my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill] |
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Where is the nose-cut magic foal with which my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill? |
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His aunt says, go afterwards, |
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you will come to a clean hill, to a clean meadow. |
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you will find a horse herd of seven horses, |
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shake the iron horse bit, |
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the stallion that looks at you, |
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catch that stallion! |
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If all of them spring back, |
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don't touch them, go away! |
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You'll come to your middle uncle. |
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Then he goes off. |
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Suddenly he comes to his middle uncle. |
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(With) the smell of moist food, (with) the smell of dry food |
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they gave him food, they gave him drink. |
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Then he is asked, valiant hero, |
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you were born hardly a week ago, |
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where are you off to? |
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Then he says: |
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[my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill] |
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[demonstrated his hunting skill] [the nose-cut magic foal] |
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Where is the nose-cut magic foal with which my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill, his hunting skill? |
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Then he says: |
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on a clean hill, on a clean meadow |
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there is a horse herd of seven horses, |
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shake the iron horse bit, |
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the stallion that looks at you, |
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catch that stallion! |
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If all of them move back, |
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don't touch them, go away! |
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You will come to your youngest uncle. |
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Then he goes off. |
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Suddenly he comes to his youngest uncle. |
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(With) the smell of moist food, (with) the smell of dry food |
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they gave him food, they gave him drink. |
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He is asked, where are you off to? |
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[my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill] |
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Where is the nose-cut magic foal with which my father, the prince, demonstrated his man skill? |
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His youngest aunt says: |
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Later [to a clean hill] |
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you will come to a clean hill, to a clean meadow. |
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You will find a horse herd of seven horses. |
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He shakes the iron horse bit, |
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a foal born this summer |
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looks at him. |
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He says: |
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by the rotten blood of your father! |
83 |
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Where will you ever get me to? |
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He sticks the horse bit (in its mouth). |
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After sticking the horse bit in its mouth it turns into a one-year-old foal, |
86 |
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after saddling it turns into a three-year-old horse, |
87 |
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(but) it won't allow a belly strap to be put on. |
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Three ribs of its left breast |
89 |
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[with a boot bottom] |
90 |
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were kicked in with a boot bottom. |
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Just as it was losing consciousness |
92 |
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he pulls the belly strap tight, |
93 |
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swings himself up into the saddle and sets himself to rights. |
94 |
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He looks back, the hillcape where he had just been |
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can hardly be seen. |
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He goes for a long time, he goes for a short time, |
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he comes to some rich man there. |
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He says: let me spend the night! |
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[good food to feed you with] |
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From where shall I take good food to feed you with? |
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[good drink to give you] |
102 |
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From where shall I take good drink to give you? |
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He goes on, gets further. |
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[from the sky] [thin-footed] |
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[fire-footed sky-boy] |
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May a thin-footed, fire-footed sky-boy come down on you from the sky! |
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May your black earth mother, |
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may the deepest watery sea |
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come up over you! |
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He gets further and looks back, |
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[the rich (man) he had just met] |
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The smoke of the rich (man) he had just met is billowing up. |
113 |
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He came to a house and a storehouse built at the same time. |
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An old woman and an old man |
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they are living (there). |
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He says: |
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my uncle, my aunt, [me spend the night] |
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let me spend the night! |
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[good food to feed you with] |
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From where shall we take good food to feed you with? |
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Come in, lie down! |
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He comes in. |
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Suddenly |
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the woman and the old man somehow talk with one another. |
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Suddenly [one-year-old] |
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they brought in a one-year-old calf. |
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Nephew, [this calf] |
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slaughter this calf! |
129 |
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He slaughters it, he cuts it apart. |
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The woman starts to prepare the kettle, |
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she cuts off two pieces of meat, |
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and throws them into the pot. |
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From her pocket she takes out a grain of corn, |
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she throws it into the pot. |
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The pot starts to boil, it bubbles over. |
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They eat, they drink, a bit is left over. |
137 |
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He gets up early in the morning, |
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He grabs his horse, he continues on. |
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Sometime two men |
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are hunting little birds of the forest. |
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One of the men says: |
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in the days of the old valiant man, of the old hero |
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we lived like ladies, we lived like gentlemen. |
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After the coming of the new valiant man, |
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after the coming of the new hero |
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we have sunk to maid-servants, |
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we have sunk to man-servants. |
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The second man says: |
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In the days of the old valiant man, |
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in the days of the old hero |
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we were maid-servants, |
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we were man-servants. |
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After the coming of the new valiant man, |
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after the coming of the new hero |
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we have become ladies, |
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we have become gentlemen. |
157 |
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[the man praising the old valiant man] |
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He cut the man praising the old valiant man down, and then he went |
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to the old valiant man. |
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He drinks and eats with the people. |
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Some whole townful of people |
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he cuts them all down. |
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Afterwards he is given food, he is given drink. |
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At some point he got drunk. |
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[into a seven-fathom deep pit] |
166 |
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He was thrown into a seven-fathom deep mud pit, |
167 |
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his horse [into a threefold iron house] |
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was locked into a threefold iron house. |
169 |
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He lay for a long time, he lay for a short time, |
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he woke up. |
171 |
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[in a seven-fathom deep pit] |
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He's lying in a seven-fathom deep pit. |
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Some prince's daughter |
174 |
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is chopping wood, a chip falls down. |
175 |
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He makes a tumra. |
176 |
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He pulls out three hairs from the tuft at the back of his neck, |
177 |
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he makes a string for it. |
178 |
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When an animal goes by |
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he plucks it, |
180 |
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when a bird flies by, |
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he plucks it. |
182 |
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Suddenly a flock of wild geese fly by, |
183 |
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he starts to play wild goose music. |
184 |
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The flock of wild geese [him three times] |
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circles him three times. |
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They alighted by him. |
187 |
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[on one wing of a one-eyed bird] |
188 |
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He writes a letter on one wing of a one-eyed bird. |
189 |
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If you find my horse somewhere later, |
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hand him this letter. |
191 |
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The flock of wild geese flies off. |
192 |
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After flying off, the flock of wild geese |
193 |
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hands the letter over to his horse. |
194 |
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The horse gives a whinny and [threefold iron house] |
195 |
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shatters the threefold iron house. |
196 |
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The horse runs off. |
197 |
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[to the mouth of the seven-fathom deep pit] |
198 |
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It runs to the mouth of the seven-fathom deep pit. |
199 |
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Its bit and bridle |
200 |
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hang down there, |
201 |
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he is snatched up by his horse. |
202 |
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He cuts down all the people. |
203 |
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The prince's daughter who cut wood, |
204 |
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he pulls up this prince's daughter to himself. |